SNOW: Cloud Data King Down 40% Despite 30% Growth
Snowflake (NYSE: SNOW) has been one of the hardest-hit names in the enterprise software selloff, plunging 40% from its 52-week high of $280.67 to $168.41. The cloud data platform, which went public in 2020 as the largest software IPO in history, now carries a market cap of $57.6 billion — down from nearly $93 billion just four months ago. The selloff has been indiscriminate: Snowflake reported Q4 FY2026 revenue of $1.284 billion, a 23% year-over-year increase, with product revenue growing approximately 30%. Full-year FY2026 free cash flow reached $1.12 billion, the strongest cash generation in the company's history. But Snowflake remains unprofitable on a GAAP basis, with a net loss of $1.33 billion for FY2026, and its premium valuation (51x sales, 86x free cash flow) makes it vulnerable in a market that has lost patience with growth-over-profitability stories. Add in active class action lawsuits and a stock trading 16% below its 50-day average, and the bear case writes itself. The bull case, however, hinges on Snowflake becoming the central data platform for enterprise AI — a market that could be worth multiples of its current addressable opportunity.